Police

Written in 1958 by the Polish playwright Slawomir Mrozek as a satire on the totalitarian state, The Police tells the story of the last political prisoner in an Eastern European state, asking, can you even have such a thing as loyalty if there is no disloyalty?

TARGET AUDIENCE

PERFORMANCE GROUP

"It is a very bad day for the chief of police. After 10 years languishing in prison, the state's last remaining political prisoner is insisting on taking an oath of loyalty to the country and its leader, and must therefore be released. Attempts by an enthusiastic police sergeant to act as an agent provocateur and stir up dissension among the population have failed as the people persistently refuse to break the law. The consequences of all this are gradually dawning on the chief of police even as he tries to bribe the political prisoner to remain a dissident. For the police and the criminal, the secret service and the revolutionary are entirely dependent on each other. You can't have one without the other. Can you even have such a thing as loyalty if there is no disloyalty?

Written in 1958 by the Polish playwright Slawomir Mrozek as a satire on the totalitarian state, The Police [reminds us that] you need an enemy if you are going to wage a war on terror" - Lyn Gardner, Guardian UK

Characters

CASTING

5m, 1f

CHIEF OF POLICE PRISONER - A former revolutionary, later the General's Aide-de-CampSERGEANT - an agent-provocateurWIFE - of the Sergeant-ProvocateurGENERALPOLICEMAN